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Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations

Colors and odors are associated; for instance, people typically match the smell of strawberries to the color pink or red. These associations are forms of crossmodal correspondences. Recently, there has been discussion about the extent to which these correspondences arise for structural reasons (i.e....

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Autores principales: Levitan, Carmel A., Ren, Jiana, Woods, Andy T., Boesveldt, Sanne, Chan, Jason S., McKenzie, Kirsten J., Dodson, Michael, Levin, Jai A., Leong, Christine X. R., van den Bosch, Jasper J. F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4089998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25007343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101651
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author Levitan, Carmel A.
Ren, Jiana
Woods, Andy T.
Boesveldt, Sanne
Chan, Jason S.
McKenzie, Kirsten J.
Dodson, Michael
Levin, Jai A.
Leong, Christine X. R.
van den Bosch, Jasper J. F.
author_facet Levitan, Carmel A.
Ren, Jiana
Woods, Andy T.
Boesveldt, Sanne
Chan, Jason S.
McKenzie, Kirsten J.
Dodson, Michael
Levin, Jai A.
Leong, Christine X. R.
van den Bosch, Jasper J. F.
author_sort Levitan, Carmel A.
collection PubMed
description Colors and odors are associated; for instance, people typically match the smell of strawberries to the color pink or red. These associations are forms of crossmodal correspondences. Recently, there has been discussion about the extent to which these correspondences arise for structural reasons (i.e., an inherent mapping between color and odor), statistical reasons (i.e., covariance in experience), and/or semantically-mediated reasons (i.e., stemming from language). The present study probed this question by testing color-odor correspondences in 6 different cultural groups (Dutch, Netherlands-residing-Chinese, German, Malay, Malaysian-Chinese, and US residents), using the same set of 14 odors and asking participants to make congruent and incongruent color choices for each odor. We found consistent patterns in color choices for each odor within each culture, showing that participants were making non-random color-odor matches. We used representational dissimilarity analysis to probe for variations in the patterns of color-odor associations across cultures; we found that US and German participants had the most similar patterns of associations, followed by German and Malay participants. The largest group differences were between Malay and Netherlands-resident Chinese participants and between Dutch and Malaysian-Chinese participants. We conclude that culture plays a role in color-odor crossmodal associations, which likely arise, at least in part, through experience.
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spelling pubmed-40899982014-07-14 Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations Levitan, Carmel A. Ren, Jiana Woods, Andy T. Boesveldt, Sanne Chan, Jason S. McKenzie, Kirsten J. Dodson, Michael Levin, Jai A. Leong, Christine X. R. van den Bosch, Jasper J. F. PLoS One Research Article Colors and odors are associated; for instance, people typically match the smell of strawberries to the color pink or red. These associations are forms of crossmodal correspondences. Recently, there has been discussion about the extent to which these correspondences arise for structural reasons (i.e., an inherent mapping between color and odor), statistical reasons (i.e., covariance in experience), and/or semantically-mediated reasons (i.e., stemming from language). The present study probed this question by testing color-odor correspondences in 6 different cultural groups (Dutch, Netherlands-residing-Chinese, German, Malay, Malaysian-Chinese, and US residents), using the same set of 14 odors and asking participants to make congruent and incongruent color choices for each odor. We found consistent patterns in color choices for each odor within each culture, showing that participants were making non-random color-odor matches. We used representational dissimilarity analysis to probe for variations in the patterns of color-odor associations across cultures; we found that US and German participants had the most similar patterns of associations, followed by German and Malay participants. The largest group differences were between Malay and Netherlands-resident Chinese participants and between Dutch and Malaysian-Chinese participants. We conclude that culture plays a role in color-odor crossmodal associations, which likely arise, at least in part, through experience. Public Library of Science 2014-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4089998/ /pubmed/25007343 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101651 Text en © 2014 Levitan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Levitan, Carmel A.
Ren, Jiana
Woods, Andy T.
Boesveldt, Sanne
Chan, Jason S.
McKenzie, Kirsten J.
Dodson, Michael
Levin, Jai A.
Leong, Christine X. R.
van den Bosch, Jasper J. F.
Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations
title Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations
title_full Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations
title_fullStr Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations
title_full_unstemmed Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations
title_short Cross-Cultural Color-Odor Associations
title_sort cross-cultural color-odor associations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4089998/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25007343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101651
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